Author Archive: Providence Chapel
If God had left me alone
I feel that I would have been a very king of sinners, if God had left me alone. I cannot understand the reason why I am saved, except upon the ground that God would have it so. I cannot, if I look ever so earnestly, discover any kind of reason in myself why I should be a partaker of Divine grace.
J. C. Ryle: Life, Ministry, and Wisdom Part 3
J. C. Ryle – Life, Ministry, and Wisdom, Part 2
J. C. Ryle – Life, Ministry, and Wisdom
Iain Murray’s new Banner of Truth biography on J. C. Ryle, 19th century British Anglican pastor, gives an outstanding glimpse into Ryle, which many Christians would enjoy and greatly benefit from, who have profited from Ryle’s writings, but know nothing about him. In this newly-released biography, J. C. Ryle: Prepared to Stand Alone, Murray gives a close-up look at the entire life and ministry of Ryle, with a very valuable insight into how Ryle had to choose to stand for the truth against increasing liberalism within his own church denomination.
I strongly encourage you to get the book and read it as part of your summer reading. It is not a big book (259 pages) and can easily be read over a 2 week period.
Some of my Daily Thoughts for now will be some choice gleanings from Ryle in this wonderful book.
J. C. Ryle’s life (1816-1900) included remarkable contrasts — the promise of a fortune, then the poverty of a family bankruptcy; a Suffolk country pastor, then bishop of the leading seaport of the British Empire. But also there was still a greater change–from the successful youth at the elite schools of Eton and Oxford, who did not pray or read his Bible until he was 21, to become a true Christian, who was ‘bold as a lion for the truth of God’s Word and his Gospel.’ Ryle’s life is convincing evidence that Christianity stands or falls, depending on its relation to the Word of God and to the Holy Spirit. That Ryle is being read widely at the present time gives hope for better days.
– Iain Murray
Some perspectives on Ryle —
F. J. Chavasse called him “that man of granite with the heart of a child.”
Marcus Loane said, “Ryle was, at heart, an evangelist.”
Martyn Lloyd-Jones called Ryle a “famous, outstanding, and beloved exponent of the evangelical and reformed faith.”
J. I. Packer says Ryle was “a single-minded Christian communicator of profound biblical, theological and pastoral wisdom, a man and minister of giant personal stature, and electric force (unction was the old name for it).”
Richard Hobson, Ryle’s pastor in Liverpool while he was bishop there, said Ryle was “bold as a lion for the truth of God’s Word and his Gospel.”
“We want more boldness among the friends of truth; there is far too much tendency to sit still and wait for committees . . . . we want more men who are not afraid to stand alone. It is truth, not numbers, which shall always in the end prevail. We have the truth, and we need not be ashamed to say so. The judgment day will prove who is right, and to that day we boldly appeal.”
– J. C. Ryle
TO BE CONTINUED —
What Repentance Truly Means
Many mourn for their sins that do not truly repent of them, weep bitterly for them, and yet continue in love and league with them.
– Matthew Henry
True repentance is no light matter. It is a thorough change of heart about sin, a change showing itself in godly sorrow and humiliation, in heartfelt confession before the throne of grace, in a complete breaking off from sinful habits, and an abiding hatred of all sin. Such repentance is the inseparable companion of saving faith in Christ.
– J. C. Ryle
Unless you have made a complete surrender and are doing God’s will, it will avail you nothing, even if you’ve reformed a thousand times and have your name on fifty church records.
– Billy Sunday
Repentance, as we know, is basically not moaning and remorse, but turning and change.
– J. I. Packer
People who cover their faults and excuse themselves do not have a repentant spirit.
– Watchman Nee
God in Christ
Remembering a Friend
Elizabeth Prentiss – An Encouragement
Elizabeth Prentiss lived in a different century, but the challenges she faced, and the way she responded to those challenges, speak powerfully to us today.
Early in their married life, Elizabeth and her husband, George, suffered the loss of two of their six children. Eddie died at age five and Bessie died when just a few weeks old. In addition, Elizabeth experienced ongoing ill-health and insomnia through much of her life. In 1857, George temporarily resigned his pastorate of a large New York church due to a health breakdown brought on by overwork. Shortly after he and Elizabeth resumed their duties in 1860, the Civil War commenced (1862-65), with all the accompanying heartbreak and suffering.
Elizabeth was a prolific writer of letters, stories, poems, hymns, novels and children’s books, but the impulse behind all of her writing was pastoral. She believed that there are resources in Christ to meet every challenge and comfort every grief. She discovered in her own experience that the deeper the heartbreak, the deeper one can be drawn into experience of the love of God. The greater the challenge, the more one can grow in confidence in the still greater goodness of God. She wanted to point others to those never-failing resources of grace.
She could testify that it is when we surrender to the will of God, and trust his sovereign wisdom in every circumstance, that the worst trials can be transformed into the richest times of fellowship with God. She wrote:
God never places us in any position in which we can not grow. We may fancy that He does. We may fear we are so impeded by fretting, petty cares that we are gaining nothing; but when we are not sending any branches upward, we may be sending roots downward. Perhaps in the time of our humiliation, when everything seems a failure, we are making the best kind of progress.
As a busy mother and pastor’s wife, Elizabeth found that the busyness, interruptions and difficulties of everyday life are the ‘school of Christ’, where we learn to react with patience and good humor. At times she felt as if her family life was falling to pieces, as she didn’t have the physical resources or energy she longed for to make a peaceful and well-organized home. But in the midst of all of it, she was well-known for her warm welcome, generous hospitality, sense of humor, and her artistic gifts.
I have been inspired by Elizabeth Prentiss as one of the most ‘real’ role models of practical holiness I have ever come across. She discovered that the harsh realities of everyday life, far from hindering our growth in grace, can be the means by which we grow. The theme of her life is summed up in these words:
To love Christ more – this is the deepest need and the constant cry of my soul. Down at the bowling ally, out in the woods, on my bed, or out driving, when I am happy and busy, and when I am sad and idle, the whisper keeps going up for more love, more love, more love!
– Sharon James
Some Wisdom from Mike Morrow
– Everything of eternal value is birthed out of pain and suffering.
– Christ mediates a new covenant for us. The new covenant is not ‘I will if you will,’ but ‘I will, I will, I will.
– Longsuffering and patience means having a long fuse before you blow up.
– Pray that the Spirit of God will come upon you.
– Some people say we should not glean doctrine from the Book of Acts. I say: ‘All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness’ (2 Tim 3:16).
– Mike Morrow